THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE 1Chinese Aircraft Attack Commission DEMANDS U.S. LEAVE SOUTH: Criticizes INavy WASHINGTON (A)-An Amer- ican Navy plane has been shot down off Red China's Hainan Is- land, government sources said yesterday. Red Chinese MIG aircraft at- tacked two unarmed American planes which strayed near Com- munist Hainan Island Tuesday night. One was shot down, the other fled to Da Nang, South Vietnam:. ' The Pentagon said the two U.S. Navy propeller driven Al sky- raiders inadvertently strayed into Hainan's airspace because of nav- igational difficulties. Shot Down "One of the planes was ihot down by Communist MIG air- craft," the Pentagon announce- ment said. It placed the spot about five miles off the east coast of Hainan Island. Peking Radio, in a broadcast monitored in Tokyo, charged the United States with -carrying out "war provocations." 'Heavy Blow' "Navy pilots of the People's Liberation Army immediately dealt a heavy blow and shot down one of them and damaged the other," Peking said. At the Pentagon, Asst. Secre tary of Defense Phil G. Goulding said he did not know whether the second plane which escaped had been damaged or whether its pi- lot was inured. Goulding said this 1i;ot reports he last saw the other plane in a vertical dive and :moking." No Comment Goulding refused repeatedly to say anything about the downed pilot. "I am not going to answer any questions about the status of the pilot," Goulding said. He would not give a reason. He also asserted: "I am not go- ing to discuss any questions about air-sea rescue operations." Possible Search This, suggested that U.S. forces might be searching the. waters in hopes of recovering the pilot. t A preliminary report in Wash- ington said that the pilot who made it to Da Nang had seen a parachute descending from the plane that was shot down. Red China claims territorial waters out to 12 miles from its coastline. The same limit applies to its airspace. No Match The slow, flying Skyraiders - no match for the supersonic MIGs - were on a ferry flight from Cubi Point in the Philippines to the aircraft carrier Coral Sea, in the Tonkin Gulf. The carrier launches fighter bombers on raids against North Vietnam. What happened to cause their navigational difficulties was not explained. Goulding said he did not know what the weather conditions were. Only a few days ago another Al Skyraider came within a few miles of overflying Hainan but turned back apparently without incident. /11IVI Plane s, Down One Guardsmen Civil Disorders Panel Considers Special Federal Riot Force N. Korea Threatens War At Panmunjom Meeting ANMUNJOM, Korea (/P)-North committed 73 other serious viola- patching armed murderers Into ea told the Americans yester- tions of the trice in the past 44 the Republic of Korea." that there will be war unless days. Glaring at Smith, Pak replied: PA Kore day WASHINGTON (A)--The Presi- "you take your bloody hands off 'The decision whether there is dent's Commission on Civil Dis- Korea and withdraw from South peace or hostility depends upon orders is considering recommend- Korea." the. whim of an apparently ir- ing creation of a specially trained Maj. Gen. Pak Chung Kook of responsible North Korea," declared federal force to deal with urban North Korea was replying to a Rear Adm. John V. Smith. senior riots. U.S. charge at an Armistice Com- UN Armistice Commission repre- Sources close to the commission mission meeting that the Comnu- sentative. said the proposal reflects dissatis- nists had sent commandos into 4. faction with the performance of IsYour side can have peace mere- National Guard units in trying to Seoul to try to murder President ly by unilaterally stopping acts of quell riots last summer. Chung Hee Park Jan. 21 and had aggression. You must stop dis- Further evidence of this dis- satisfaction was expressed in a speech Tuesday night by MayorTh n H n iDi o a John V. Lindsay of New York sp e h T e d y n g tM yrJo n V Li d a of N w Y r hn City, vice chairm an of the com - mission. ; j'A&I/ns t.rel.n ] s-"Ak.c a rra "We don't want war, but we are not afraid of it." i M i r i 1 l 3 I -Associated Press SAIGON CLEANUP continues as three South Vietnamese Rangers move into a burning block of houses which had been the last stronghold of a band of Viet Cong guerrillas. The guerrilla band was annihilated after a nightlong battle last Friday. MarinesEscalate Urban War; V.C. Pressure High at Khe Sanh. E t i By The Associated Press U.S. Adarine jets poured rockets, napalm and tear gas yesterday against North Vietnamese troops holed up in Hue's walled Citadel in one phase of an American air campaign intensified on both sides of the border. GI Path Explosives 'chipped at massive stonework of the Citadel, once the imperial grounds of Vietnam's emperors, in an attempt to cut a path for American Leathernecks trying to root out the remnants of a Hanoi regiment. But it was slow work. Field reports said almost no progress was made through the 15th day of Vietnamese and American operations against the enemy force. The rest of the city is largely cleared of the Communists who claimed it at the outset of their lunar new year offensive. Meanwhile, history's most con- centrated aerial bombing cam- paign is- under way around the U.S. Marine base at Khe Sanh, a qualified U.S. Air Force source said yesterday. Although large numbers of North Vietnamese troops, supply, and ammunition dumps have been pre- sumably destroyed, Communist pressure on the base 14 miles south of the demilitarized zone builds steadily. Some Marine officers believe that without the mighty bombing campaign, Khe Sanh would bej untenable. Only 5,000 Marines face a forcej I of perhaps 20,000 North Vietna- mese regulars.' In extreme peril, such as a ma- jor enemy break through of Khe Sanh's defenses, the Marines prob- ably would retreat into their bunkers while U.S. planes dropped thousands of antipersonnel bombs to blow the North Vietnamese off the Leatherneck positions. Long range artillery with shells that air burst could help but there are only a few guns capable of: this in position. U.S. Close In Marine officers in Da Nang say that the North Vietnamese have steadily closed in and that some enemy bunkers and trenches are only about 300 yards from the Marine barbed wire. At such a distance, radar bomb- ing strikes are extremely hazard- ous. Even visual bombing has to be carried out with the utmost care. Two outposts guarding Sara-, vane, -strategic town in southeast Laos, were also attacked by North Vietnamese, L a o t i a n military sources reported. They said government forces re- treated but the outposts were not entrenched positions. The out- posts are about seven miles west of Saravane. The action was not considered significant since both sides long have been maneuver- ing around Saravane. It is from Saravane that Laos sends out patrols and planes to watch or attack North Vietnam- ese moving down the Ho Chi Minh trail to South Vietnam. Lindsay Speaks Lindsay told the New York State Publishers Association in Buffalo: "In its studies, the commission found that the National Guard won no medals in those cities where it was called into burning ghettoes. Criticisms "The guardsmen were under- trained and perhaps overequipped. By and large they were unsym- pathetic to the Negroes. This manifested itself in that the guardsmen were unreliable, trig- ger. happy and ineffective in deal- ing with mobs in the streets." Recommend Action President Johnson appointed the 11 member panel last July 29 to investigate the causes of riots that erupted in Detroit, Newark and other cities and- to recom- mend preventative action. There was no immediate official National Guard reaction to the development, but one officer said he doubts the guard "would ob- ject very strenuously" to forma- tion of a special riot control force because it "is a very unpleasant job and nobody likes it." The COURT THEATRE 2555 Burns Ave. MACBIRD! February 14, 15, 16, 17, 23, 24 March-Every Fri. and Sat. 8:30 P.M. Tickets at Hudson's & W.S.U. Gen Adm $3.00 Students/Groups $2.00 Information/Reservations 822-6655 kIH G , ; } f ,, E .j ,, G a t;veaceHo esDim PARIS G) - U.N. Secretary- policy in Vietnam. Both agreed General U Thant conferred yester- that negotiations on Vietnam "are day with a North Vietnamese dip- not for tomorrow," the sources lomat and came away convinced said. that peace in Vietnam is as far It was also emphasized during away as ever, informed sources Thant's talks that Red Chinese reported. influence in Hanoi, the North After a 75-minute meeting Vietnamese capital, was discour- with Mai Van Bo, head of the aging whatever sentiment there North Vietnamese delegation in was in North Vietnam for negotia- Paris, Thant was said to believe tion, the sources said. that the positions of North Viet- Thant is taking the view that I nam and the United States were if the bombing of North Vietnam too far apart to hope for any early h peace conference. halts he is satisfied that peace Later Thant saw President talks will follow within three or Charles de Gaulle, a critic of U.S. four weeks. He said North Korea would match build up for build up and blow for blow and if it came to that "all out war." This was an open meeting of the commission. The subject of the intelligence ship Pueblo, seized by the North Koreans Jan. 23, came up only incidentally. Pak brought up the Pueblo, say- ing the United States was taking advantage of the incident to make "full preparations for war." Cyrus R. Vance, the envoy sent by President Johnson to try to smooth over relations with South Korea, put to a strain by the secret negotiations at Panmunjom, again postponed his departure for Wash- ington. The South Koreans have com- plained that the United States was paying too much attention to the Pueblo incident and not enough to North Korean threats to South Korea's security. They also do not like the secret talks,. from which South Korea has been excluded. "Vance was to have left Seoul Tuesday," after two days of talks with Park, Premier Chung I Kwon and other officials. - . The Amfbushe .. .. . his am " '. ' ' >. . . -au* M~. .Al ::..-: SO {e 0 World News roundup I T 1 ] 1 WAByThe Associated Press WASHINGTON - The United States is resuming military aid to Jordan, the State Department announced yesterday. "Details are now being nego- tiated with the Jordanian gov- ernment," press officer Robert J. McCloskey told a news conference. The United States, McCloskey added, "continues to believe that restraint on all arms shipments to the area is essential to the stability of the Middle East." ATLANTA, Ga.-Former Ala- bama Gov. George Wallace an- R SIT y E SOCI nounced yesterday that former} Georgia Gov. Marvin Griffin will be listed as his vice presidential running mate in order to satisfy procedural requirements in several states. * * * ATLANTA, Ga.-A Negro sol- dier, recently returned from Viet- nam action, faces an Army court martial today on a charge of dis- respect toward a white officer. Spec. 5 Emmett T. Doe Jr., 26, of New York, who was a para- trooper in Vietnam, has been charged with ref ering to a captain as "a white bastard."j DIAL 5-6290 ENDING TONIGHT W. C. FIELDS Film Festival! CO SAR" tot ENT RERR JANICEADE vS GE -0RY-BEVERLY AAMSK A Featuring the "Slaygire " Screenplay by HERBERT BAKER: Music Composed and Conducted by HUGO MONTENEGRO Based on the novel by DONALD HAMILTON Produced by IRVINGALEN- Directed by HENRY LEVIN A Meadway-Claude Picture/TECHNICOLOR' g iii Coming FRIDAY Suggested For Mature Audiences I r uI'uvm MUSICAL INTERNATIONAI1 PRESENTATIONS From France, Poland, and Germany 28th Annual Chamber Music Festival in Rackham Auditorium Pro rams LOEWENGUTH STRING QUARTET. ___ 8:30, Fri., Feb. 16 Quartet in D major. Op. 45 -Roussel Quartet in C major ---------Ibert Quartet in F major - ----- Ravel WARSAW CHAMBER ORCHESTRA ..--.8:30, Sat., Feb. 17 Sinfonia in B-flat major --Albinoni Nova Casa & Tamburetta -Jarzebski Concerto for Violin in E major. Bach Suite for String Orchestra --.Corelli Concerto in A major-------Vivaldi Concertino in G major --..Pergolesi EARLY MUSIC QUARTET_- - 2:30. Sun., Feb. 18 Italian t rottola and Instrumental In- MON.-THURS. 7:00-9:00 FEAENHELATRE-t- FRI. 7:00-9:00-11 :00 FOH VILLarE 375 No. MAPLE RD.-"7691300 SAT. 3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00-11:00; SUN. 1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00 2rid BIG WEEK-- "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST! A PICTURE YOU'LL HAVE TO SEE- AND MAYBE SEE TWICE TO SAVOR ALL ITS SHARP SATIRIC WIT AND CINEMATIC TREATS!" -NEW YORK TIMES "THE FRESHEST, FUNNIEST AND MOST TOUCHING FILM OF THE YEAR!" -SATURDAY REVIEW "DON'T MISS IT!"-NBC-TV TODAY SHOWj I 11 11- &jy, JOSEPH E LEVINE PRESENTS MIKE NICHOLS LAWRENCE TURMAN..t- PRODUCTION / f! - S l o / THE The Greatest Laffs Of The World's Funniest Man 2 Full-Length FEATURES "THE BANK DICK" ---And--- "N EVER GIVE A SUCKER AN EVEN BREAK" "SUCKER" AT 1:05, 3:40, 6:15, 8:45 "BANK DICK" AT I r .x ". h is s e ,I 8 eM' arr i s r B ea ch B I ..r ' e r o g Ae~ s ge Up whent S n Se I Iii (3 I